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A89588 A thanksgiving sermon: preached to the Right Honorable the Lord Maior, aldermen, and Common Councell of the Citie of London, upon occasion of the many late and signall victories, and deliverances vouchsafed to the Parliaments forces, in Pauls Church London, July 28. 1648. By Stephen Marshall, B.D. Minister of Gods Word at Finchingfield in Essex. Marshall, Stephen, 1594?-1655. 1648 (1648) Wing M791; Thomason E455_2; ESTC R205009 23,539 38

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A THANKS GIVING SERMON PREACHED To the Right Honorable the Lord Maior Aldermen and Common Councell of the Citie of London Upon occasion of the many late and signall Victories and Deliverances vouchsafed to the Parliaments Forces In Pauls Church London July 27. 1648. By STEPHEN MARSHALL B. D. Minister of Gods Word at Finchingfield in Essex Psalme 66. 11 12 13. Thou broughtest us into the net thou laydest affliction upon our loynes Thou hast caused men to ride over our heads we went through fire and water but thou broughtest us out into a wealthy place I will goe into thy house with burnt offerings I will pay thee my vowes LONDON Printed by R. Cotes for Stephen Bowtell at the Signe of the Bible in Popes-head Alley 1648. TO THE RIGHT HONORABLE John Warner Lord Major of the Citie of LONDON My Lord THis plaine Sermon was preached in obedience to the call I received from you it is published according to your request and that it may be though in never so weak a measure a strengthning of your hands in your great work it is humbly presented unto you as a pledge of the unfeigned respect and service of Your Lordships much obliged STEPHEN MARSHALL A THANKSGIVING SERMON PREACHED To the Right Honorable the Lord Maior Aldermen and Common-Councell of the Citie of London ISAIAH 9. 4 5. For thou hast broken the yoke of his burden and the staffe of his shoulder the rod of his oppressour as in the day of Midian For every battell of the Warriour is with confused noise and garments rolled in blood but this shall bee with burning and fuell of fire THE first word of my Text For For thou hast broken the yoke of his burden doth tell us this hath dependence upon what is laid down before If you please to looke into it you 'l find it to be thus The Lord in the former Chapter had threatned the terriblest calamitie that ever came upon the Jewish nation a wofull darke night of affliction of severall hundreds of yeers was now beginning and such calamities were threatned as the Lord professed that many men amongst them when they look'd up to heaven and saw nothing but darknesse there nothing but confusion upon earth they should rave and be mad they should curse their God that would not helpe them curse their King that could not helpe them should bee driven into utter darknesse but yet notwithstanding in the beginning of this Chapter the Lord saith that unto those that feared him to his own people the darknesse and uncomfortablenesse of it should not bee so great as they had formerly met with in some lesser afflictions for God did as i● were create a new Star that should shine unto his people all that long and darke night that is a most glorious promise of Jesus Christ and salvation by him which is laid downe in the seven first verses of this Chapter and there are severall degrees or breakings out of the light of this comfort I 'le but name them so farre as may leade me to the Text First The Lord tells them whence this comfort should come there should a glorious light shine to them in the second verse the people that walked in darknesse should see a great light they that dwelt in the land of the shadow of death upon them hath the light shined which is the promise of Jesus Christ setting up his Gospel amongst them as it is expresly interpreted in the fourth of Matthem This Text seemes to bee a propheticall description of Capernaum where Christ first set up his Ministery some hundreds of yeers before it was built which stood in the land of Galile by the Sea side in the way leading to the Gentiles Secondly The next degree is what the comfort is that they should have from this light in the third verse they should have great joy by it the Lord had formerly more multiplied their nation but never gave them more joy then now they should have though they should bee in a very afflicted condition yet they should have as much joy in the Gospel of Christ as ever that nation injoyed in the dayes of David or Solomon though now they should live after a precarious manner and should be tributaries to all the foure great Monarchies of the world in their succession first to the Assyrian then to the Persian then to the Grecian and then to the Roman and all this time a space of some 700. yeers they should bee a despised contemned people yet from the Lord Christ and the promise of the Gospel should they have as much joy as ever they had when their Nation was most enlarged yea such joy that it should bee like the joy of harvest or the joy that Souldiers have when they divide the spoile that is the second degree now my text is the third degree or breaking out of this glorious comfort and that tels you What the mercy shall bee that shall bee the cause of so much joy what it is that should fill them with so much joy why hee would breake every yoke of their burden every staffe that lay upon their shoulders every rod of their oppressors that whipped them hee would break all as hee did once doe it in the day of Midian he will burn up their enemies with fewell of fire hee would free them from them all and tread them under their feet then the last branch of all and the height of their comfort is That Christ will not only break other yokes but would put the yoke of his own sweet and easie government upon them himselfe will bee their King To us a Son is given to us a child is borne upon whose shoulder the government shall bee his name is Wonderfull Counsellor the mighty God the everlasting Father the Prince of peace and in these things should the hearts of Gods people rejoyce in their most afflicted times Thus stands the dependence of my Text so that these two verses that I have read containe the cause of all the joy that the people of God should finde in Christ in their afflicted times and there are two branches of the Text to bee handled First Here is the blessing that should bee conferred upon them in these words thou hast broken the yoke of his burden the staffe of his shoulder the rod of his oppressors that is the mercy they should receive Secondly Here is the manner how this should bee done and that is laid downe First It should bee as in the day of Midian that is as in the day when in Gideons time with 300. men with lamps and pitchers the Lord destroyed an innumerable multitude of Midianites so would the Lord Christ now worke this great deliverance that he promises to his people Then Secondly The manner of it is yet more clearely and fully laid downe in the 5. verse by shewing that the way of Gods working of this shall bee diverse from the manner